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a student told me that today. After struggling for 4 hours some people (likely girls) start crying.
i went to berkeley, where no one gave an s about labs. or at least i didn't. and it didn't really keep me from getting a med-school worthy grade.
In my orgo lab... One day,
A 2 girl group was doing a distillation of some sort and somehow the pressure kept building up in the flask with no where to go. Eventually the timebomb exploded and glass shattered, also catching the hood on fire... One of the girls was somewhat burned and had to go to the nurse's... Before she left, she was crying... not from the pain, but from the lost product...
The end.
I saw one girl cry, at the very first significant experiment. She was just extremely frustrated because she could not get anything to work, and understandably she thought that lab could be a precursor for things to come.
Luckily, as we all learned, the product counted for almost nothing. We just had to be able to write insightful lab reports and ace a final exam.
lame.
people should try working in fields 16 hours a day working to produce both enough grain to satisfy your liege and survive the winter.
do that for a few years middle ages style then come back and complain that you have the opportunity to go to university and learn organic chemistry so that you can become a physician.
mmm nothing like going through distillations/reflux then taking your "product" to the IR only to realize that youre totally missing the OH stretch that is supposed to be there.
p.s. How many schools do experiments on the microscale kits?
This is ludicrous.My orgo labs were quite odd. We were graded by this TA based on percent yield (so a 60% yield, which is actually decent, was a failing grade), which she verified by taking the product vials. She was required by the department to return each one within 2 weeks- so wer had 3 vials, and could have 2 out and working on filling the third.
This was the plan, at least. The two-week cycle became 3, and one day there were no vials. She lost all our vials- apparently they were all in a box and the box had been lost. Making it worse, she refused to admit it, so we were all charged by the department to replace them, to the tune of about $40. Since she couldn't grade what she didn't have, she just gave everyone Cs.
I tried going to the department, but no dice. The C stood, as did the charges.
My orgo labs were quite odd. We were graded by this TA based on percent yield (so a 60% yield, which is actually decent, was a failing grade), which she verified by taking the product vials. She was required by the department to return each one within 2 weeks- so wer had 3 vials, and could have 2 out and working on filling the third.
This was the plan, at least. The two-week cycle became 3, and one day there were no vials. She lost all our vials- apparently they were all in a box and the box had been lost. Making it worse, she refused to admit it, so we were all charged by the department to replace them, to the tune of about $40. Since she couldn't grade what she didn't have, she just gave everyone Cs.
I tried going to the department, but no dice. The C stood, as did the charges.
Naw, Orgo lab is like cooking (...)
Am I the only one here who had an orgo lab that was counted as its own individual class with its own grade? (it was only 1 credit though)
Mine were this way. Made the C not hurt quite so badly.
Mine were this way. Made the C not hurt quite so badly.